To no surprise, the Macau casino industry suffered through its 16th straight monthly revenue decline during September and the market’s eighth straight month of drops of more than 30 percent.

By Howard Stutz Las Vegas Review-Journal

October 1, 2015 - 6:08 am

The Sands Cotai Central logo is seen in front of its hotel in Macau, September 20, 2012, (Tyrone Siu/Files/Reuters)

To no surprise, the Macau casino industry suffered through its 16th straight monthly revenue decline during September and the market’s eighth straight month of drops of more than 30 percent.

Macau’s Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau said Thursday the region’s 36 large and small casinos collected $2.1 billion in gaming revenue in September, a decline of 33 percent.

The market has been in a free fall for nearly a year-and-a-half over a sinking Chinese economy and a mainland China government crack down on corruption that has ensnared several of the high-end junket operators tasked with bring big spending gamblers to Macau’s casinos.

“September results were broadly in line with expectations as a better start to the month was quickly erased by the seasonal, and softer this year, pre-Golden Week malaise at month end,” Deutsche Bank gaming analyst Carlo Santarelli told investors. “While the September result is the smallest level of decline since January, one would be hard pressed to call it encouraging.”

Through September, Macau gaming revenue is down 36 percent over the same nine months of 2014. Macau, the world’s largest gaming market by revenue, produced a record $45.2 billion in gaming totals in 2013. The figure fell 2.6 percent in 2014.

Las Vegas Sands Corp., Wynn Resorts Ltd. and MGM Resorts International operate casinos in Macau and are expanding their holdings.

Even as the market continues to slide, more competition is coming to Macau.

The 1,600-room Macau Studio City Hotel-Casino being built by Melco-Crown is expected to open by the end of October. Las Vegas Sands’ $2.7 billion Parisian resort will open next summer, while Wynn Resorts set a late March opening for the $4.1 billion Wynn Palace. MGM Resorts International expects to open its $2.9 billion MGM Cotai late next year.